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ID121400
Title ProperIndia's Role in the South China Sea
Other Title Informationgeopolitics and geoeconomics in play
LanguageENG
AuthorScott, David
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article looks at the South China Sea, an area of dispute between China and other littoral states, as a new area of geopolitical and geoeconomic interest for India. The article follows the strategic discourse on the South China Sea circulating in the Indian government and wider strategic community, and brings in Chinese responses and interpretations of India's involvement. India's role in the South China Sea is four-fold: first, naval deployments; second, increasing strategic-military links with littoral states like Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam; third, economic involvement of Indian energy companies in South China Sea waters; and fourth, discussions between India and other regional and extra-regional China-concerned powers about the South China Sea. India's involvement in the South China Sea represents a new development in its Look East Policy, a new balancing factor in the interplay of actors within these waters, and a new friction factor within India-China relations.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Review Vol. 12, No.2; Apr-Jun 2013: p.51-69
Journal SourceIndia Review Vol. 12, No.2; Apr-Jun 2013: p.51-69
Key WordsSouth China Sea ;  Geopolitics ;  Geoeconomics ;  India's Role in the South China Sea ;  Indian Energy Companies ;  India - China Relations


 
 
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